Sunday, January 24, 2010

The Cost of Prorogation

According to media reports, the cost to taxpayers of shutting down Parliament is nearly $50 million – tax dollars wasted for basically nothing.

Members of Parliament and Senators, as well as hundreds of other Parliamentary staff, continue to get paid while Parliament is shut down.

According to The Hill Times, Parliament employs roughly 1200 full-time employees. Of those 1200 full-time employees, 222 people, mostly food service and Hansard reporting employees, were laid off as a result of prorogation – which means that the bulk of the cost of running Parliament is still borne by taxpayers even through Parliament is prorogued. Furthermore, laid-off Parliamentary staff are likely now collecting Employment Insurance at taxpayers’ expense.

A conservative estimate of taxpayer dollars wasted on prorogation would exclude MP salaries, as they do other work besides sit in Parliament.

Here’s how it all adds up:

Total operating cost for the House of Commons per year: $426,541,000Total annual cost of MPs’ salaries: $108,209,000House of Commons operating cost, minus MP salaries: $318,332,000

Average number of days Parliament sits: 173Average cost for a single sitting day in the House of Commons: $318,332,000/173 = $1,840,000 per dayAverage cost for a single sitting day in the Senate: $65,261,000/173 = $377,000 per day

Number of sitting days Parliament is prorogued: 22Cost of prorogation in the House of Commons: $1,840,000 x 22 = $40,480,000Cost of prorogation in the Senate: $377,000 x 22 = $8,294,000